quote[I have no doubt that changing injectors in this will be only 5x as worse as in a normal duramax and parts will be just as high.
Looks like it's got sucker written on it. Customers will only pay so much for labor before they will be fed up with poorly packaged engines.] quote
As an auto technician who very likely will find myself servicing this engine in the future this comment portraits the biggest problem we face just about every day we get to work. We study, and equip ourselves with the tools and information necessary to diagnose and repair "transportation equipment", only to see a huge portion of consumers act like we are working on a $200 appliance. The perspective of the quote above turns into a self fullfilling prophecy that needs to be broken. Consumers that understand that these machines need serviced, and that it simply costs what it has to cost are the ones that not only see the value in having the equipment but trained professionals available to service it when necessary. The ones that purchase this technology, and then moan and complain that it's ownership also comes with a certain level of responsibility for it's up-keep actually work to thin the number of shops and technicians available to do so when that day finally comes. Strange as it may seem, this drives the cost up, while arguably forcing the quality (of the technician) down! Both of those points would be ones "the consumer" would if asked say they don't want, yet their purchase habits dictate otherwise. The heart of the problem really comes from manufacturers that try to tell the public their product is "virtually naintanence free" when no such "machine" is ever going to be built.
I can't tell you how many times I have overheard a conversation where someone was failing to have a vehicle repaired, while I knew there were competent techs and shops that could easily solve the problem. The reason they were not getting the car fixed was they weren't looking for an educated, and equipped technician, they were looking price first and therefore rewarding the people without the tools and schools for not investing in them with their business.